The corpse walker : real life stories, China from the bottom up / Liao Yiwu
Material type: TextPublisher number: ; Atlantic Publishers & Distributors | : 7/22 Ansari Road Darya Ganj New Delhi Publication details: New York : Pantheon Books, . ©2008Description: xiv, 320 pages ; 25 cmISBN: 9780307388377Subject(s): Social problems & social services | Social problems of & services to groups of people | Working class -- China | Social structure -- China | Social structure -- China | China -- Economic conditions | Economic history | Social conditions | Social structure | China | Soziale SituationGenre/Form: DDC classification: 362.850 YIWItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | SNU LIBRARY | 362.850 YIW (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | 26780 |
The professional mourner --
The human trafficker --
The public restroom manager --
The corpse walkers --
The leper --
The peasant emperor --
The Feng Shui master --
The Abbot --
The composer --
The rightist --
The retired official --
The former landowner --
The Yi district chief's wife --
The village teacher --
The mortician --
The neighborhood committee director --
The former red guard --
The counterrevolutionary --
The Tiananmen father --
The Falun gong practitioner --
The illegal border crosser --
The grave robber --
The safecracker --
The blind Erhu player --
The street singer --
The sleepwalker --
the migrant worker.
A compilation of twenty-seven extraordinary oral histories that opens a window, unlike any other, onto the lives of ordinary, often outcast, Chinese men and women. Liao Yiwu (one of the best-known writers in China because he is also one of the most censored) chose his subjects from the bottom of Chinese society: people for whom the "new" China--the China of economic growth and globalization--is no more beneficial than the old. Here are a professional mourner, a trafficker in humans, a leper, an abbot, a retired government official, a former landowner, a mortician, a feng shui master, a former Red Guard, a political prisoner, a village teacher, a blind street musician, a Falun Gong practitioner, and many others--people who have been battered by life but who have managed to retain their dignity, their humor, and their essential, complex humanity. Liao's interviews were given from 1990 to 2003.--From amazon.com
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